Manning arrested, released on bond
By Daily Bruin Staff
Aug. 25, 2002 9:00 p.m.
UCLA football player Ricky Manning, Jr. surrendered to police
August 27 after a felony warrant was issued for his arrest,
stemming from a fight outside a Westwood bar in April.
The senior cornerback and All-America candidate was charged with
two counts of causing great bodily injury and released the same
night after posting $60,000 bond.
“I was involved in an incident where I was aggressed by an
aggressor at a bar-restaurant in Westwood,” Manning said
after a morning practice on Wednesday.
“I defended myself, and that’s what I’m going
to (say) in court. Hopefully, I get the court on my
side.”
Manning is scheduled to appear at Los Angeles Superior Court on
Sept. 17 for his arraignment.
Manning’s attorney, Danny Davis, said the 21-year-old was
“somber, concerned and focused about this event,” but
was surprised at the charge because the April 24 fight outside
Madison’s Neighborhood Bar & Grill on Broxton Ave,
occurred over four months ago. According to Los Angeles District
Attorney spokeswoman Jane Robison, the charges against Manning were
delayed due to a lengthy investigation.
According to Davis, the 5-foot-9, 181-pound Manning was leaving
the off-campus restaurant and bar when older, bigger men who had
tried to pick a fight and began some pushing inside the eatery
apparently waited for Manning and his friends outside.
“Ricky was not drinking. The aggressors were
drinking,” Davis said. “He had his senses about him.
They started to attack him, he defended himself.”
No weapons charge was filed against Manning.
Tremaine Mitchell, Manning’s friend, was originally
charged with one count of assault, and another was recently added.
Mitchell, 21, is the brother of former UCLA star wide receiver
Freddie Mitchell, who left school as a junior after the 2000 season
for the National Football League.
Manning reported the incident to head coach Bob Toledo the
following day and underwent disciplinary action that the coach did
not specify.
Toledo will give Manning the benefit of the doubt and allow him
to remain on the team and play. He will not suspend Manning unless
the cornerback is convicted of a crime.
“I’m sticking up for him because I honestly believe
the poor kid was trying to defend himself,” said Toledo, who
has talked to witnesses to the fight. “Somebody put him in a
corner where he couldn’t do anything else.
“He’s never lied to me. He’s not going to B.S.
you. So I believe him.”
Toledo has a long-standing policy of dismissing players who are
convicted of felonies and believes it is now being used against his
team.
“These people out there are going to try to get in a fight
with our guys all the time just so I start kicking guys off the
team, and I’m not going to put up with that type of
situation.”
Freshman defensive end C.J. Niusulu currently faces felony
battery charges after a fight in July at a drive-in theater in his
hometown of Barstow. Junior defensive end Asi Faoa was originally
charged with felony assault after a fight at a fraternity party in
1999, and he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in last September.
Last season, tailback DeShaun Foster was suspended for violating
NCAA extra-benefits regulations. The Heisman Trophy candidate drove
a sport-utility vehicle that an actor loaned him. Starting
quarterback Cory Paus was also suspended last year by Toledo after
failing to report a second drunken-driving arrest.
Senior linebacker Audie Attar was kicked off the team in June
for punching the brother of former UCLA quarterback Scott McEwan at
a bar.
Toledo recently appointed Manning to his 10-player advisory
council, which meets weekly to discuss keeping teammates in line
off the field.
“(Toledo) hit it right on the head when he said we have to
police ourselves,” Manning said last week. “We listen
to our peers before we listen to anybody. Me saying something to a
teammate means a lot more.
“I’m a born leader.”
Manning is a four-year starter and a two-time All-Pac-10
selection. He played minor league baseball in the Minnesota Twins
organization over the summer. Even after this incident, his team
has not lost respect for him.
“He’s still a leader of this team,” senior
offensive tackle Mike Saffer said. “It was an unfortunate
incident, but Ricky was responsible enough to tell coach what was
going on. He took care of his business.”
UCLA will try to keep Manning’s arrest, which came 11 days
before it plays Colorado State in its season opener, from becoming
a distraction.
Senior punter Nate Fikse, who was a roommate of Manning’s
last year, said, “We just have to be a team, unite and forget
about it. We just have to pull through.
“Shit happens.”
With reports from the Associated Press and Andrew Edwards, Daily
Bruin Reporter.